AI-org and Bae are both lifestyle tracked by AIDiveForge. Below is a side-by-side comparison of pricing, capabilities, platforms, and ownership — sourced from each tool's live website and verified before publishing.
Point your camera, get an AI-generated synopsis, and follow up with questions — that is the entire loop. The workflow is one-shot: snap, identify, optionally chat. Every identification saves as a Spot, so you build a running log of what you found and where. The free tier caps you at 3 identifications and 5 chat messages per day, which covers casual exploration but breaks down on a dense museum day or a market crawl where you want to snap everything. There is no API and no self-hosted option, so your data and availability depend entirely on the vendor's infrastructure.
Bae lets you create multiple AI companions with distinct personalities and have ongoing conversations that accumulate personal history over time. The free tier gives you a daily message limit and multiple companion slots, which is enough to test the format and see whether the memory model holds up across sessions. The ceiling arrives fast: permanent memory, which is the core differentiating feature, is a paid-only capability. Without it, the relationship continuity the platform is built around does not fully exist. Adult content is also paid-only. For users who hit that wall and want persistent, intimate companionship, upgrading is the only path — there is no workaround on the free tier.
Attribute
AI-org
Bae
Pricing
Paid
Paid
Price
$6.99/month or $39.99/year for Premium
$1.90/week or $99/year for Pro
Free trial
No
7 days
Open source
No
No
Has API
No
No
Self-hosted option
No
No
Platforms
iOS (Apple App Store); Android (implied based on app ecosystem)
Web, implied mobile via responsive design
Released
2024
—
Pros
Automatic Spot-saving after every identification, so your travel journal builds itself without manual entry — eliminating the gap between 'I saw something interesting' and 'I have no idea what it was called.'
Contextual follow-up chat attached to each identified Spot, which means you can ask practical questions — best time to visit, nearby food, accessibility details — without losing the identification context or opening a separate search.
Covers a wide identification surface (landmarks, food, wildlife, foreign-language signs) in one app, so you avoid carrying four single-purpose tools for a single trip.
Free tier provides meaningful daily access, so you can test real identification quality on actual travel scenarios before committing to a paid upgrade.
Multiple companion slots are available on the free tier, so you can test different personalities and archetypes before committing to the paid memory layer.
Persistent memory on the paid tier means companions carry forward personal details across sessions, which means the conversation on day thirty actually references what you shared on day one instead of starting over.
Explicit support for romantic and intimate relationship dynamics in a private, contained environment, so users exploring those scenarios do not have to work around content filters designed for general-purpose assistants.
No integration complexity or technical setup — the platform is fully managed and browser or app-based, so there is no infrastructure overhead standing between you and the companion experience.
Cons
The free tier hard-caps at 3 identifications and 5 chat messages per day. On any visit to a market, trail, or dense historic area, that ceiling hits within the first hour — at which point you either stop identifying or pay. Teams or travel writers using this for content research will hit the wall on day one.
No API and no export path means every Spot is locked inside Spotter's interface. Travelers who want to pull their journal into Notion, a custom map, or any other tool are stuck with manual copy-paste — and a team building a travel documentation workflow around this tool eventually switches to a pipeline they can actually own.
Identification requires a live internet connection, so the tool fails silently in the exact environments where it would be most useful — remote hiking areas, international roaming with limited data, or underground transit. Users in those scenarios revert to offline guidebooks or delayed searches.
Permanent memory is a paid-only feature, which means the free tier structurally cannot deliver the long-term relationship continuity that is the platform's core value proposition — free users are testing a diminished version of the actual product.
Adult content is gated behind the paid tier, so users who create companions specifically for intimate interactions and start on free will hit a hard content wall before the relationship develops, with no workaround.
There is no API and no self-hosted option, which means any user or team that needs data portability, conversation export, or control over where their data lives has no path forward — and at that point the only real alternative is moving to an open-source LLM stack they control entirely.
The platform is a single-purpose consumer product with no integration surface, so anyone who wants companion-style memory as a component inside a broader application or workflow cannot use Bae for that purpose — the architecture does not support it.
Bottom line
AI-org and Bae are closely matched on pricing model, openness, and API availability — pick by feature set and platform support in the table above.
Comparison data is sourced and verified by the AIDiveForge data pipeline. AIDiveForge is editorially independent.
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